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Why Street Youth Become Involved in Crime

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Title: Why Street Youth Become Involved in Crime


1
Why Street Youth Become Involved in Crime
  • Stephen W. Baron
  • Queens University

2
BACKGROUND FACTORS
3
Physical Abuse
  • Particularly strong association with violent
    offending

4
  • Parents who abuse their children create strain by
    seriously threatening many of the childs goals,
    values, needs, activities, and/or identities.
    Given cultural expectations and the experiences
    of other children, this type of behavior is
    likely to be seen as unjust.

5
  • Children who are abused adopt aggressive
    interpersonal strategies or techniques as a means
    of problem solving. These ideas about using
    coercion to solve problems can evolve into
    definitions favorable to violence encouraging
    more violence.

6
  • Further, abusive experiences may diminish victims
    ability to cope with stress and can inhibit their
    development of empathy for others.

7
  • These experiences also can influence youths to
    seek out violent situations including joining
    peers who approve of, encourage, or require
    violence while providing a sense of belonging.

8
  • Fleisher (1995) argues that abuse and rejection
    leads street youths to develop a defensive world
    view. Predicated on fear, this world view is a
    way of perceiving, interpreting and explaining
    social situations and processes.

9
  • A defensive world view contains a number of
    traits including feelings of vulnerability and
    the need to protect oneself. It also leads to
    the belief that no one can be trusted, that no
    one will provide aid, and a willingness to use
    violence and intimidation. In short, he argues,
    the defensive world view provides abused youths
    with survival skills.

10
Other Forms of Abuse
  • We tend to find that the effect of various other
    forms of abuse on the types of crime that we are
    examining today are indirect. By this I mean that
    abuse tends to lead to other factors in the
    foreground (being homeless for example, which
    tend to have a stronger direct effect on crime)

11
  • When there is a direct relationship between the
    other forms of abuse and crime it appears to be
    made stronger or weaker depending on what are
    referred to as conditioning effects.

12
EMOTIONAL ABUSE
  • Those who have suffered Emotional Abuse for
    example but who somehow have been able to keep
    their Self-Esteem are more likely to be involved
    in a range of property and violent offenses

13
  • Some researchers note that emotionally abused
    children can become hostile and aggressive and
    can generalize these feelings into perceptions of
    the world as a hostile environment.

14
  • The harsh use of punishment (e.g.
    humiliation/insults, threats, screaming and /or
    physical punishments) is likely to be seen as a
    high magnitude form of strain that leads to very
    low social control undermines attachments and
    commitments to conventional others and
    institutions and creates some pressure or
    incentive to engage in crime to reduce the
    strain.

15
SEXUAL ABUSE
  • Histories of Sexually Abuse and having attitudes
    more supportive of breaking the law are
    associated with total offending, property
    offending and violent crime.
  • Further, those who have been Sexually Abused and
    have more peers who engage in crime are more
    likely to be involved in violent offenses.

16
  • There is evidence that sexual abuse can lead to
    feelings of betrayal causing hostility and anger.
    Further, the powerlessness associated with the
    abuse can impair judgments and decrease coping
    skills at the same time as increasing
    insecurities, anxieties, and the desire to
    protect oneself.

17
  • The shame, guilt, and stigmatization victims
    experience leaves them at greater risk for
    association with stigmatized others including
    deviant peers who, together with the sense of
    powerlessness and betrayal, can influence
    criminal conduct.

18
ABUSE WILL ALSO HAVE AN INDIRECT EFFECT THROUGH
OTHER VARIABLES
  • Leads to taking to the street
  • Leads to the development of values supportive of
    criminal behaviour
  • Leads to the association with others who are
    engaging crime

19
PRIOR CRIME
  • Previous offending is seen as a resource that can
    be tapped on the street in order to help survive.

20
ECONOMIC FACTORS
21
HOMELESSNESS
  • As the length of homeless increases so does the
    participation in crime

22
  • Living on the street probably serves to detach
    street youths from conventional society. As they
    become absorbed into this environment, contact
    with, and attachment to, conventional society is
    decreased, leaving the youths at even greater
    risk for involvement in criminal activities

23
  • The street also provides opportunities for
    criminal behaviour. Youths lacking shelter may
    wander commercial and residential areas at all
    possible hours increasing the likelihood that
    they will intersect with attractive targets
    lacking guardianship.

24
  • The street also provides access to criminal peers
    who provide pressure for, and support in,
    carrying out criminal activities. It is likely
    that as time progresses, street youth restrict
    their interactions to others who spend their time
    predominantly on the street, peers who are
    seriously criminally inclined and who support and
    probably facilitate criminal successes. These
    friendship networks coalesce amongst youths with
    similar life situations who may be caught up in
    and supporting the "street lifestyle."

25
The Effects of Homelessness are Muted or Expanded
by Number of Factors.
26
  • Homelessness has a greater impact when one
    possess attitudes that it is ok to break the law,
    and when one has higher levels of self-efficacy
  • Homelessness may also lead to crime, when one has
    less self-esteem.

27
  • The subjective interpretation of ones poverty
    also appears to be important in understanding the
    impact of homelessness on crime. So for many
    youth it is not simply the fact of being
    homeless.

28
  • When one compares oneself to others and is
    dissatisfied with their lifes situation, or
    feels relatively deprived, then homelessness has
    a stronger link to crime.
  • Similarly, when one feels monetarily
    dissatisfied, then one is more likely to break
    the law as the length of homelessness increases.

29
OTHER OBJECTIVE ECONMIC FACTORS
  • Hunger
  • Lack of shelter
  • Street Adversity (combination of above)
  • Lack of income
  • are also linked to certain offenses.

30
State Support
  • Favourably, State assistance has been found to
    reduce the participation in property crime,
    violent crime, and drug dealing. Although
    Coercion (e.g. unfavourable experiences on state
    assistance threatened or actual removal) may
    increase violent crime.

31
UNEMPLOYMENT
  • Find the role of unemployment and crime is
    somewhat complex. Only a few studies have found a
    direct relationship with unemployment and crime.
    The longer the period of unemployment the greater
    the criminal activity. But may only be a
    sub-population of the unemployed

32
  • Unemployment reduces people's bonds to
    conventional societal institutions. It is argued
    that the absence of employment delegitimizes
    commitment. The unemployed individual has fewer
    stakes in conformity to be jeopardized by
    criminal conduct. Not having much to lose, they
    can become strong candidates for criminal
    activity when they experience unacceptable
    unemployment or unemployability.

33
  • Unemployment also affects individuals' beliefs in
    the legitimacy of conformity to conventional
    rules or norms. This leaves actors free to
    deviate because they do not believe that all law
    breaking is intrinsically wrong.

34
  • In sum, with the relevance of work negated and
    the belief that lawbreaking is wrong weakened,
    unemployment can produce more individuals who
    have a motive to deviate.

35
The impact of unemployment tends to be
strengthened when other conditions are also
present.
  • When blame for unemployment is placed externally.
  • When the person holds attitudes favourable to
    breaking the law

36
Impact of unemployment on crime is also greater
when
  • The youth dismisses the dominant meritocratic
    ideology
  • When the youth is monetarily dissatisfied
  • When the youth has quit looking for work (drugs
    sales)

37
If unemployed for longer periods of time and see
this as an unjust outcome crime is more likely
when
  • One holds values supportive of crime
  • Associate with others who engage in crime
  • Who place blame for their situation externally

38
EMPLOYMENT HISTORIES
  • Those actively engaging in job searches are less
    likely to commit crime
  • Those with greater work ethics are at greater
    risk of violent offending.

39
  • Those with greater of jobs more likely to sell
    drugs.
  • However, those with fewer jobs x who reject the
    meritocratic ideology more drug dealing
  • While those with a greater of jobs who are
    angry more drug dealing

40
SUBJECTIVE INTERPRETATIONS OF ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
41
MONETARY DISSATISFACTION
  • More dissatisfaction more crime
  • AGAIN THIS HAS A GREATER IMPACT WHEN IN TANDEM
    WITH OTHER FACTORS

42
Impact of Monetary Dissatisfaction is Greater
  • When it occurs with unemployment
  • When it occurs along with longer periods of
    homelessness
  • When youth have criminal peers
  • When youth hold values supportive of engaging in
    crime

43
  • Also predictive is having High Monetary Goals and
    Low Monetary Expectations

44
RELATIVE DEPRIVATION
  • Scholars argue that crime will be more likely
    when individuals believe that they are worse off
    monetarily than others with whom they compare
    themselves. It is not just the result of the
    failure to achieve, but also a function of the
    achievements of those in an individuals
    comparative reference group(s). Relative
    deprivation is thought to generate feelings of
    resentment and hostility

45
Impact of Relative Deprivation is greater when
other conditions present
  • When one has peers who also engage in crime
  • The longer one is homeless
  • When blame is laid externally for ones
    situation.

46
STREET FACTORS
47
PEERS WHO ENGAGE IN CRIME
  • Youth on the street gravitate towards one
    another, develop new frames of reference under
    which status is attained and alternative routes
    to financial success

48
  • Sensing failure and contempt, they together
    attempt to develop new norms, new standards and
    criteria for success that are more readily
    achieved.

49
  • Their new cultural form resolves their problems
    more effectively than any solutions offered by
    institutional means and provides an environment
    where the dominant meritocratic ideology can be
    rejected.

50
  • The group offers illegal means for attaining
    financial success and status. The group can
    support and encourage the commission of property
    crime, drug distribution and violence. Peers can
    offer skills, tutelage in crime, and
    opportunities for crime.
  • Adversity associated with the tendency to offer
    help to engage in, and accept help from peers to
    engage in crime

51
HAVING ATTITUDES SUPPORTIVE OF CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR
52
  • Anger associated with poverty linked to the
    development of attitudes supportive of crime
    particularly violent crime.
  • Arousal stemming from the stress and strain of
    living under adverse economic conditions expands
    aggressive regulative rules.

53
  • Living under adverse socioeconomic conditions
    where youths are socially isolated. Social
    isolation creates a situation where rules
    supporting crime may be transmitted
    interpersonally within primary groups

54
  • Homeless and other rejected youths tend to band
    together on the street, leaving them shielded
    from positive interactions outside of their
    immediate social sphere
  • Acquired through vicarious learning observe
    others

55
  • Street youths are more likely to engage in crime
    when they have been rewarded by peers for past
    behavior and expect future rewards for the
    behavior
  • Being the victim of crime can increase adoption
    of values supportive of violence

56
  • In sum, the street provides an avenue in which
    subcultural rules favouring crime are learned and
    reinforced.

57
VICTIMIZATION
  • Property Victimization
  • Violent Victimization
  • Robbery Victimization

58
DRUG AND ALCOHOL USE
  • Some researchers argue that the critical factor
    in the move from trivial to serious crime on the
    street is drug and alcohol use.
  • Survey and ethnographic studies alike show that
    persistent offenders spend much of their criminal
    gains on alcohol and drugs

59
  • Often proceeds of these offenders' crimes are
    used for "personal, nonessential consumption
    (e.g. nights out)," and "enjoying good times"
    rather than basic needs. This lifestyle is often
    enjoyed in the company of others who share the
    consumption of drugs and/or alcohol in bars, on
    street corners and in other locations.

60
  • Crime and substance use provides people on the
    street with an identity, or a role they can
    fulfil, is an activity and expected behaviour
    they can enjoy, and presents the opportunity for
    social status among their peers. In this
    lifestyle, the relationship between substance
    abuse and crime is a "most" general one. Both are
    required to participate in the subculture and
    reap its rewards and satisfactions. Success in
    the subculture is defined by substance using and
    criminal activity.

61
  • It is the commitment to this lifestyle more than
    addiction that is important in explaining either
    drug use or crime within this population. Within
    this lifestyle crime is more than simply a method
    of getting substances. Crime finances and
    facilitates use, and use encourages more profit
    making crimes to support an ever growing pattern
    of use.

62
SOCIAL-PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS
  • ANGER
  • Poor parenting, being in an adversive environment
    for long periods of time leaves one angry at any
    point. Constant exposure to coercion, child
    abuse, victimization, homelessness, prison,
    welfare, all increase the likelihood of
    developing trait anger

63
  • LOW SELF-CONTROL
  • Includes impulsiveness, low time horizons,
    risk-taking, low empathy
  • Causes similar to those outlined for anger

64
  • CONTROL BALANCE SURPLUSES AND CONTROL BALANCE
    DEFICITS

65
  • COERCIVE IDEATION
  • The world is a coercive place that can only be
    overcome through coercion.
  • Constant exposure to coercion, child abuse,
    victimization, homelessness, prison, welfare

66
PERCEPTIONS AND EFFECTS OF PUNISHMENT
  • PERCEPTIONS OF CERTAINTY
  • PERCEPTIONS OF SEVERITY

67
  • CHARGES WHILE ON THE STREET IF HAVE A HISTORY OF
    PHYSICAL OR SEXUAL ABUSE
  • There is also evidence that being incarcerated
    along with the experiences of being homeless,
    experiencing violent victimization on the street,
    receiving welfare, and physical abuse can
    increase violent crime. It is this global
    experience of coercion that leads to crime.
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